MICROSOFT RELEASES INTERNET EXPLORER 10 BROWSER FOR WINDOWS 7
The latest version of
Microsoft's Web browser is now available to the vast audience connecting to the
Internet on personal computers running on the Windows 7 operating system.
The redesigned browser,
Internet Explorer 10, made its debut last month when Microsoft released Windows
8, which makes dramatic changes to an operating system that has been powering
PCs for decades.
Internet Explorer 10
initially is being introduced Tuesday to Windows 7 users in a
"preview," or test, mode. The new browser isn't compatible with XP,
Vista and any other older Windows version.
Microsoft is staking its
future on Windows 8, far more PCs rely on Windows 7. Microsoft Corp. says more
than 670 million licenses for Windows 7 have been sold since its release in
2009. Windows 8 is unlikely to approach that level of usage until at least
2014, based on analyst forecasts.
Desktops, laptops and
tablet computers running on Windows 8 are sold with Internet Explorer 10
already installed. Those with older Windows versions will have to download and
install the new browser separately.
Although Internet
Explorer 10 is supposed to process Web pages more quickly and smoothly than its
predecessors, it may have limited appeal to Windows 7 users.
That's because Microsoft
primarily designed Internet Explorer 10 for tablet computers and other devices,
including a new breed of PCs that have touch-screen displays. Relatively few
Windows 7 PCs can be controlled with fingers on a display screen.
Microsoft is hoping many
website developers will download and install Internet Explorer 10 on their
Windows 7 machines and see the browser's potential for making online services
more compelling and dynamic. If that happens, more websites may include
features that take advantage of Internet Explorer 10's full capabilities on the
bevy of Windows 8 machines expected to be sold during the next year, said Ryan
Gavin, Microsoft's general manager for the browser.
Internet Explorer 10's
main purpose is to make viewing websites as enjoyable and convenient as using
applications tailor-made for specific mobile devices.
For instance, when
reading an article on a news site, users of Internet Explorer 10 can just swipe
across the screen to continue reading the next page instead of having to scroll
down to click on a link, as most browsers require. Microsoft also says games
such as "Contre Jour" played on Internet Explorer 10 will work as
well, or even better, than those packaged in applications.
Realizing that goal is
crucial to Microsoft as it tries to make a bigger splash in the smartphone and
tablet markets. It probably will take years before mobile devices running on
Windows 8 boast as many applications as their competitors, giving Microsoft an
added incentive to build a superior Web browser. The mobile operating systems
designed by Apple Inc. and Google Inc. each boast more than 700,000
applications.
Microsoft also hopes
Internet Explorer 10 can reverse recent trends in the Web browser market. By
some estimates, Google's Chrome browser has supplanted Internet Explorer as the
world's most popular browser. Other research firms still assert that Internet
Explorer remains the most widely used, although all measures show it has been
losing market share to Chrome, Mozilla's Firefox and Apple's Safari.
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